About EEMT¶
Project History¶
The Effective Energy and Mass Transfer (EEMT) framework was developed by the Critical Zone Observatory community to provide a quantitative approach for understanding energy and mass flux in Earth's Critical Zone.
Timeline¶
2005: Initial EEMT framework developed by Rasmussen et al.
2011: Open system thermodynamics integration (Rasmussen et al.)
2014: Topographic and vegetation effects quantified (Rasmussen et al.)
2016: High-performance computing implementation (Swetnam et al.)
2025: Modern data infrastructure and cloud computing integration
Core Principles¶
Open Science¶
- All code is open source and freely available
- Methods are peer-reviewed and reproducible
- Data sources are publicly accessible
- Results are validated against field measurements
FAIR Data Principles¶
- Findable: Comprehensive metadata and documentation
- Accessible: Public repositories and APIs
- Interoperable: Standard formats and protocols
- Reusable: Clear licensing and attribution
Community-Driven Development¶
- Collaborative development model
- Multiple institutional partnerships
- Student training and education
- International research network
Technical Philosophy¶
Energy-Based Framework¶
EEMT uses energy flux as a common currency to integrate:
- Solar radiation and climate processes
- Biological productivity and carbon cycling
- Hydrologic partitioning and water balance
- Geomorphologic processes and landscape evolution
Scale Integration¶
From local processes to continental patterns:
- Plot scale: 1-100 m² detailed process studies
- Hillslope scale: 0.01-1 km² terrain effects
- Catchment scale: 1-1000 km² watershed analysis
- Regional scale: >1000 km² climate gradient studies
Temporal Integration¶
From daily variations to millennial trends:
- Daily: Solar radiation and weather processes
- Monthly: Vegetation growth and seasonal patterns
- Annual: Climate averages and interannual variability
- Decadal: Long-term trends and climate change
- Centennial: Landscape evolution and soil formation